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Alcohol:

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Brandy --- grapes, cherries, other fruits. Rum --- sugar cane or molasses ... Ages --- Salerno, Italy: First documented distillation of alcohol (as brandy) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Alcohol:


1
  • Chapter 9
  • Alcohol
  • Social Beverage/Social Drug

2
THREE BASIC CATEGORIES OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES
  • Beer --- approximately 4.5 percent alcohol
  • Wine --- approximately 12-14 percent alcohol
  • Distilled spirits (liquor) --- approximately 40
    to 50 percent alcohol

3
METHODS OF PRODUCING ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES
  • Fermentation --- the process of making wine,
    converting natural sugars into ethyl alcohol by
    the action of yeasts
  • Brewing --- the process of making beer from
    barley grain
  • Distillation --- the process of making liquor, by
    boiling a fermented liquid then cooling it, to
    produce a higher alcohol content

4
SOURCES OF DISTILLED SPIRITS
  • Brandy --- grapes, cherries, other fruits
  • Rum --- sugar cane or molasses
  • Scotch --- corn and barley malt
  • Bourbon --- corn
  • Gin --- many grains, flavored with juniper
  • Vodka --- pure alcohol diluted with water
  • Tequila --- juice of the maguey plant

5
HIGHLIGHTS IN THE HISTORY OF ALCOHOL
  • 3700 B.C --- Egypt First official brewery
  • 1700 B.C. --- Babylonia First reference to wine
  • Middle Ages --- Salerno, Italy First documented
    distillation of alcohol (as brandy)
  • 1750 --- Gin epidemic in English cities
  • 1830 --- Alcohol consumption peaks in U.S.
  • 1920 --- National Prohibition of alcohol begins
    in U.S.

6
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES AND ALCOHOL EQUIVALENCIES
  • 1 five-ounce glass of wine
  • 5 x 0.12 0.60 oz alcohol
  • 1 twelve-ounce beer
  • 12 x 0.045 0.54 oz alcohol
  • 1 1.5-ounce shot of 80-proof liquor
  • 1.5 x 0.40 0.60 oz alcohol
  • 1 twelve-ounce bottle of wine cooler
  • 12 x 0.05 0.60 oz alcohol

7
STANDARD ALCOHOLIC DRINKS
  • 1 five-ounce glass of wine
  • 1 twelve-ounce can of beer
  • 1 1.5-ounce shot of liquor
  • 1 twelve-ounce bottle of wine cooler
  • ALL OF THE ABOVE CONTAIN ROUGHLY EQUIVALENT
    AMOUNTS OF ALCOHOL

8
WHAT IS A STANDARD DRINK?
9
WHAT IS A STANDARD DRINK?
Kaskutas and Graves (2000) found that African
American women commonly poured themselves
drinks that contained up to six times the
amount defined as a standard serving (12g
alcohol). Banwell (1999) reported that the
average serving for a glass of wine in Melbourne
bars was 180mL, not 100mL as defined both in
surveys and by health promoters in Australia. 4
British pints of beer (16g ethanol each), 5 US
bottles of beer (1214g ethanol each), and 6
Australian middies of regular beer (10g ethanol
each) contain approximately the same quantity of
ethanol (60g).
10
WHAT IS NORMAL DRINKING?
WHO (2000) threshold for consumption with medium
risk of acute adverse outcomes gt 60 g of alcohol
per day for men and gt 40 g of alcohol per day for
women. In the US, one standard drink e.g., 12
ounces of beer, 5 ounces of wine, or 1.5 ounces
of distilled spirits contains approximately 12
grams of alcohol.) Consumption with high risk
of adverse consequences gt 100 g of alcohol per
day for men and gt 60 g of alcohol per day for
women.
11
DISPARITY OF ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION IN THE U.S.
  • Imagine 10 people and 10 bottles of beer
  • Three people drink nothing (non-drinkers)
  • Five people split two bottles
  • One person drinks two bottles
  • One person drinks six bottles
  • 20 of the U.S. population drinks 80 of the
    total alcohol consumed.

12
VISUALIZING THE DISPARITY IN ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION
IN THE UNITED STATES
13
TWO DEFINITIONS OF BINGE DRINKING
  • Five drinks or more in a row for men
  • Four drinks or more in a row for women
  • An extended bout of drinking or other substance
    use (often lasting at least two days) in which
    the person neglects other activities in order to
    engage in this behavior

14
BINGE DRINKING
  • Global (2000) Canadian men and Swedish women had
    the highest percentages of drinkers who had
    engaged in heavy episodic drinking in the last 12
    months.
  • Israeli men and women had the lowest percentages
    of heavy episodic drinking.
  • Scandivnavia (2001) Danish men and women had the
    highest annual frequencies of consuming six or
    more drinks on one occasion, Norwegian men and
    Finnish women had the lowest frequencies.

15
BINGE DRINKING
  • EU (2002) people in the United Kingdom had the
    highest annual frequency of heavy drinking
    (drinking a bottle of wine or the equivalent on
    one occasion), and people in France had the
    lowest.
  • EU vs US (2002) the number of days per month on
    which five or more drinks were consumed was
    almost twice as high in Germany as in the United
    States.

16
BINGE DRINKING
  • The lowest percentages of student binge
    drinkersapproximately 10 of all drinkers
    Lithuania, Greece, Slovak Republic, Portugal, and
    Romania.
  • The highest percentages of binge drinkers -
    Poland, Ireland, the United Kingdom, and many
    northern countries (percentages of students
    bingeing at least three times per month ranged
    between 20 and 40).
  • Bingeing, however, showed no significant
    association with the percentage of drinkers in a
    given country.

17
OXIDATIVE BREAKDOWN AND ELIMINATION OF ALCOHOL
  • Alcohol is broken down to acetaldehyde, via
    alcohol dehydrogenase
  • Acetaldehyde breaks down to acetic acid, via
    acetaldehyde dehydrogenase
  • Further oxidation results in oxygen, carbon
    dioxide, and calories of energy.

18
Dark Side of Alcohol
  • According to the National Institute on Alcohol
    Abuse and Alcoholism
  • 14 million Americans meet standard criteria for
    alcohol abuse or alcoholism
  • Alcohol plays a role in 1 in 4 cases of violent
    crime
  • More than 16,000 people die each year in
    automobile accidents in which alcohol was
    involved
  • Alcohol abuse costs more than 180 billion
    dollars a year

19
Dark Side of Alcohol
  • Heavy drinking can cause
  • inflammation of the liver (alcoholic hepatitis)
  • scarring of the liver (cirrhosis)
  • increase blood pressure
  • damage heart muscle (cardiomyopathy)
  • linked with several cancers, particularly those
    of the mouth, throat, esophagus, colon, and
    breast

20
ACUTE PHYSIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF ALCOHOL
  • LD50/ED50 ratio is approximately six.
  • Increased heat loss in cold weather
  • Swollen fingers and limbs
  • Dehydration
  • Increased likelihood of cardiac arrhythmia
  • Reduction in REM sleep
  • Risk of toxicity to fetus during pregnancy
  • Adverse interactions with other drugs

21
MAJOR ACUTE PHYSIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF ALCOHOL
  • Toxic reactions
  • Heat loss and the Saint Bernard myth
  • Diuretic effects
  • Sleep effects
  • Effects on pregnancy
  • Drug-alcohol interactions
  • Hangovers

22
EMERGENCY SIGNS OF ACUTE ALCOHOL INTOXICATION
  • Stupor or unconsciousness
  • Cool or damp skin
  • Weak, rapid pulse (more than 100 bpm)
  • Shallow and irregular breathing
  • Pale or bluish skin

23
CALCULATING BLOOD-ALCOHOL CONCENTRATION LEVELS
24
ACUTE BEHAVIORAL EFFECTS OF ALCOHOL
  • Blackouts
  • Impaired driving skills, eye-hand coordination
  • Increased tendency toward violence and aggression

25
TECHNOLOGICAL ASSISTANCE IN REDUCING DRUNK DRIVING
26
DWI BLOOD-ALCOHOL CONCENTRATIONS IN VARIOUS
COUNTRIES
27
HEALTH BENEFITS OF ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION
  • Increases HDL cholesterol, reducing risk of heart
    disease
  • Reduces risk of diabetes mellitus
  • Reduces risk of stroke
  • Reduces risk of dementia
  • NOTE Benefits are associated with moderate
    levels of alcohol consumption only.

28
HEALTH BENEFITS OF ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION
  • American Heart Association, 1996, Thomas A.
    Pearson, MD, PhD
  • The lowest mortality occurs in those who consume
    one or two drinks per day. In teetotalers or
    occasional drinkers, the rates are higher than in
    those consuming one or two drinks per day. In
    persons who consume three or more drinks per day,
    total mortality climbs rapidly with increasing
    numbers of drinks per day.

29
HEALTH BENEFITS OF ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION
  • More than 100 prospective studies show an inverse
    association between moderate drinking and risk of
    heart attack, ischemic stroke, peripheral
    vascular disease, sudden cardiac death, and death
    from all cardiovascular causes. The effect is
    fairly consistent, and corresponds to a 25-40
    reduction in risk.
  • The connection also applies to those at high risk
    for cardiovascular disease - people with type 2
    diabetes and those with high blood pressure,
    angina (chest pain), a prior heart attack, or
    other forms of cardiovascular disease.

30
HEALTH BENEFITS OF ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION
  • Part of a national 1985 health interview survey
    showed that moderate drinkers were more likely
    than non-drinkers or heavy drinkers to be at a
    healthy weight, to get 7-8 hours of sleep a
    night, and to exercise regularly.

31
GUIDELINES FOR RESPONSIBLE DRINKING
  • Know how much you are drinking
  • Choose beer or wine over liquor
  • Drink slowly
  • Dont cluster your drinking
  • Eat something substantial before drinking
  • Never drink alone
  • Never drive a car after having had a drink
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